Book Three Chapter Eighty Two: Player Motivation

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Book Three Chapter Eighty Two: Player Motivation

Am I a ghost? Qube burst out. Other ghosts are visible, but are there invisible ghosts? Are they around us all the time?

I no, youre not a ghost, the Chosen One seemed surprised that this was the issue she was most concerned about. But really, he couldnt just tell Qube that she was supposed to be dead and not expect her to fixate on the practicalities of it.

Right, but the Evil Emperor never actually cursed me, she said, seeking clarification.Visit no(v)eLb(i)n.com for the best novel reading experience

No, he admitted.

So what did he do to me? How did he get a lock of my hair? Why do I remember him saying hed take my head, but not actually taking my head. If Im not a ghost, does he have a ghost version of my head? Why wasnt my hair a ghost hair then?

The Chosen One swallowed. Oh boy, he said faintly, thats a lot of questions at once.

Qube ruthlessly suppressed the urge to apologise for having too many questions.

So you know how when you take certain Temple items, they duplicate? the Chosen One said carefully.

When I make twins, yes, Qube replied.

Right, well, thats because those items are strongly tied to the main story of the simulation. I did tell you about the fact that this worlds a simulation, right? He gave them all a bleary-eyed stare.

Yes, but you said that tech was just another word for magic, and we already knew that it was a spell, Qube waved away that revolution. A simulation is just like a sustained spell, right?

Shed already had her existential horror over discovering that her entire world was tied to a mana pool. This was old news.

Sure, freaking out over the not-dead stuff but cool with the matrix stuff, the Chosen One muttered.

So my baby making is tied to the fact its a spellSorry, simulation? Qube prompted.

Yeah, so, the main story, which involves the Golden Prophecy, has stuff tied into it, like the gems and items and stuff, the Chosen One said, slowly shuffling through the main hallway of the castle. And the story involves you being dead, but the Devs expected me to have the others with me.

He looked at the group. Sexy Screamy Spider Briar was still digging her claw into his shoulder, stopping him from getting too far ahead, but wasnt looking at him. It was almost as if she was trying to give them some space to discuss Qubes aliveness, without letting the Hero get away from the conversation. Sencha Bard was rearranging some of the flags tangled around Squiggless crowns, a task which seemed to absorb all his attention. Only Definitely Bad Guy, with his mishmash of bright red and icy blue hair, eyes and tattoos, looked back at the Chosen One.

Well, not exactly looking like this, but the characters, the Hero amended. What it didnt account for, however, was you.

He looked at her on that last line, and she felt a thrill of power at the idea that a story strong enough to rule a world still hadnt been enough to anticipate her.

Then she remembered that was because the Chosen One had broken it, rather than any intrinsic specialness in her, and felt marginally less powerful.

So basically, when something happens that the story cant account for, like someone it thinks is dead grabbing an item it knows that only the official party should be able to take cuz its in the Temple, it freaks out and does weird things, he explained. Its the same with your spells.

I thought it was because my spells were tainted with my curse, she whispered. That was her true special power. That was what had drawn the eyes of the Devs towards her, wasnt it?

Well, its cuz youre supposed to be dead, the Hero crushingly countered. And since your spells are, uh, a part of you, and the story thinks you cant be here, it messes with the parameters embedded in the others to keep them on track with what the story wants.

I knew it! Sencha Bard exclaimed suddenly, startling everyone. He cleared his throat, and made an apologetic gesture. My sincerest apologies for startling you all. But I knew that we were being forced in certain directions by a greater narrative. Why, Ive found myself taking actions anathema to my character, and there was no chance I would have been so easily taken prisoner by that subpar Thieves Guild if fate hadnt been guiding their hands.

Her whole life had been dedicated to following the very thing that dictated her death.

And not just her death.

She realised suddenly that, if the Golden Prophecy had been carried out exactly according to its wishes, then no one originally from the village would have ever left it.

Felix was dead. Dead enough that even the Evil Emperor couldnt revive him and use him to hurt them. Hed died that morning, when the golden light had sped across the sky and selected his house. All the other Potentials had died. Every single villager, except for maybe Mr. Igma, had been fated to die in the village that destiny-filled day.

It was an extraordinary waste of life.

And it was also utterly, utterly pointless.

Why did we all have to die? she asked the Chosen One, indignation seeping through the fog of nothingness in her mind.

What oh, in the village? The Chosen One immediately caught her line of thought.

Yes! If this is all just a story for a simulation, why would they need every single person in the village to die? Qube felt as if shed finally found solid ground beneath her feet.

She wasnt gently sad about the situation. She was mad.

It made sense if it was part of a Dark Prophecy, because that was for the side of Evil. Terrible, but from their perspective they were trying to do Evil, so of course theyd want to kill the village where all the Potential Chosen Ones lived. But if its one story, for some military, then what was the point of slaughtering our entire village? If the Evil Emperor was so bound by the narrative that the story couldnt even imagine that I wouldnt be killed she shoved away the painful flashbacks that flared the instant she said that. She didnt have time for trauma, she was making a point! then it also means that it knew you would have to follow the Golden Prophecy and leave the village. There wasnt any room for you to be killed that day according to a Dark Prophecy!

The Chosen One rubbed his nose as he thought.

Yeah, I was always going to be leaving the village, he confessed.

But youre not even from the village! Qube nearly shouted. Youd only shown up that morning! So why kill everyone there? It doesnt even work with your people must have free will and Evil is a result of that argument, since the script was so heavy that it took you throwing me into the sky to break me free of it. There wasnt any free will from any of the villagers that day! We never even had a chance!

The Hero grimaced. Hed progressed from rubbing his nose to rubbing his entire face. A fragment of Qube felt guilty about piling so much on her already beleaguered friend who she knew full well wasnt responsible for the Devs decisions, but the rest of her was aflame with passion.

I think it was meant to motivate me? he half suggested, half asked.

But you were already motivated! You had a Golden Prophecy to fulfil!

I dunno, the Hero confessed. Its just what they always do.

They always murder a bunch of villagers to motivate an already motivated Hero? Qube asked, aghast.

Its tradition, he explained. Its practically a clich at this point. Maybe they were trying to be ironic?

Everyone Id ever known was killed for tradition? Qube hit a new octave in indignation. I was decapitated shut up, memories! and parts of me stolen from my ironic c-corpse just because that was the way things were always done?

That was it. That was the absolute last straw. When she next met the Devs, she was going to have words with them. And she was going to make it her lifes mission to destroy the tradition of village destruction if it was the last thing she ever did!

Then they would know the true meaning of irony!